July 3, 1912 – The Chicago Daily Tribune reports that a new record for inheritance
taxes in Illinois has been set with a tax of $329,131 assessed on the estimated
$17,000,000 estate of the late R. T. Crane.
Payment of the tax by July 8, 1912 will save the heirs of the estate
more than $16,000 due to a five per cent allowance for prompt payment. The estate of Marshall Field had set the
previous record, with a tax on his estate of $125,000. The Field estate, however, sheltered nearly a
half-million dollars in tax liability by insuring that property in the estate
did not pass on to heirs at the time of Field’s death. Richard T. Crane had the singular fortune of
being born the nephew of Chicago lumber baron Martin Ryerson. At the age of 23, the young man moved to
Chicago and began a partnership with his brother. Crane’s timing could not have been
better. He had established himself as an
astute businessman in the city for a six years before the 1871 fire. After the fire his mill met the appetite of
the city, supplying it with pipe, steam engines and even elevators as
architecture moved from four- or five-story buildings to soaring towers. The company’s manufacture of enameled cast
iron bathroom fixtures also synced up nicely with the demand for luxurious
indoor sanitary facilities. In 1910 the
Crane company factories in Chicago employed over 5,000 men. For more information on the Crane company and the son of its founder you can turn to this section of Connecting the Windy City.
July 3, 1976 – The Chicago Tribune reports that artist Marc Chagall has donated a set of windows, entitled “The American Windows,” to the Art Institute of Chicago as a Bicentennial gift. The windows will measure eight by thirty feet and will be installed in an area overlooking McKinlock Court, a space illuminated by natural light. Chagall holds the city in warm regard as a result of the experiences he had in 1973 and 1974 in the creation and dedication of his mosaic The Four Seasons, installed on the east side of the plaza of the First National Bank of Chicago, now Exelon Plaza.
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